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Transversal borderings: Territory and mobility for human rights activists in the Thai-Burma borderlands
Author(s) -
Rachel Sharples
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
borderlands journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2652-6743
DOI - 10.21307/borderlands-2019-010
Subject(s) - human rights , sovereignty , framing (construction) , state (computer science) , political science , political economy , sociology , law , public administration , politics , geography , archaeology , algorithm , computer science
In this article I use an interpretation of Saskia Sassen’s ‘cross-border geographies’ as a framing mechanism for the operations of human rights activists in the Thai-Burma borderlands. I argue that these activists use aspects of the national territories they traverse, such as who belongs and associated rights and obligations, as well as state capital and services. But they also act outside of state sovereignty, in particular through digital infrastructures and transnational networking that connect to other national territories, and their irregular movement across the national border. In this way, human rights activists both operate within national territories and in ways that violate their sovereignty. Activist operations are enabled by an informality attached to the Thai-Burma border, its marginal status to central control, its pragmatic approach to state operations, and its porous nature to flows of information and people. Tighter regulation of these territories, particularly as the adjoining states attempt to exert their authority, is likely to impact the ongoing operations of human rights activists in the Thai-Burma borderlands. Cross-border geographies therefore provide a means for the critical examination of activist operations that occur within and across state and non-state spaces.

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